Planet Iron Blogger SF

May 26, 2026

Doctor Popular

“The City Is My Sweetheart”: Remembering the Art of Peet Lum

As another big move comes to an end, it’s time to figure out where all the art goes. I’ve collected a lot of small paintings and sculptures over the years, so this process always fills me with nostalgia for the San Francisco artists I’ve met along the way. None hit me harder than these two paintings by Pete “Peet” Lum.

Two paintings by Peet Lum. Both are drawn on pieces of found wood. One is a very wide (4 foot) painting of clouds and cassette tapes in red, black, and white. It says A detailed look at a painting by Peet Lum. It's a painting of a floating cassette tape in the clouds. Text says A close up view of a painting by Peet Lum. It shows a floating cassette tape and a cloud, with text saying

I think this is the fifth home where I’ve hung these two paintings over the past twenty years. Every time I unpack them, I end up thinking about Peet and that era of San Francisco all over again.

Peet was a fixture of the San Francisco art scene in the mid-2000s. He played drums with the Human Beans, painted graffiti as “Goonies”, and could regularly be found selling his paintings on sidewalks around the Mission District. His paintings often featured cassette tapes, clouds, telephone poles, and whimsical phrases like “The city is my sweetheart” or “We never sleep”. He frequently used found objects, like 2x4s and chunks of wood from construction sites, and kept his palette limited to 3 colors at a time.

A black and white photo showing Peet Lum on the sidewalk, beside several of his own paintings. Some are drawn on canvas, most are on pieces of 2x4 wood scraps. The paintings show ghosts, cassette tapes, bicycles, and other cute objects. Some have text written on them like photo by HabitForming

His pieces were incredibly cheap, probably ranging from $5-$50, which was perfect for broke-ass artists like myself who loved his work but didn’t have much to offer for it. Peet Lum wasn’t necessarily a famous artist, but if you lived in the Mission around 2005–2006, there’s a very good chance you have one of his paintings hanging somewhere in your home.

photo by Zachary Morriss photo by Rio Coffelt Roth-Barreiro photo by Maya Greven photo by Eddie Coddel

When he wasn’t selling paintings, Peet was tagging the city with two recurring characters: a Pac-Man-style ghost with spiraled eyes and a melancholy little bear with a fang hanging out and a heart on its chest. His graffiti name was “Goonies,” though he rarely needed to write it. The characters, along with short phrases lifted from his paintings, were recognizable enough on their own.

photo by HabitForming photo by SFrances photo by Loser photo by Jay Kullman photo by RatRaceForSpace photo by Loser

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve described Peet’s work to friends only to hear, “Oh yeah, I had one of his paintings. Whatever happened to that guy?” Sadly, Peet passed away on May 25th, 2006.

A flier that says Photo by Petalum

Peet’s art had a huge influence on me, but I didn’t know him personally. Our bands played a few shows together, and I’d chat with him whenever I ran into him on the street, but we never really hung out beyond that. I loved his characters, his phrases, and the clean, crisp lines in his work, but mostly I loved how much Peet cared about this city.

San Francisco’s art scene in the 2000s felt so full of energy and possibility. There was amazing art and music everywhere, and the city still felt affordable enough for weird little scenes like this to thrive.

Whenever I see Peet’s work, I’m immediately transported back to my early days in this city and how exciting it all was.

If you have a story about Peet, or photos you think I should include in this post, you can leave a comment below or email me at doc@docpop.org. And if you have any of Peet’s old work laying around, I’d love to add it to my collection. I’m still broke, but maybe we could trade stories or yo-yos 🙂

The post “The City Is My Sweetheart”: Remembering the Art of Peet Lum appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 26, 2026 08:10 PM

May 25, 2026

Doctor Popular

Stephen Colbert’s Best Post-Cancellation Stunt Yet

In the annals of post-talk-show-cancellation stunts, Stephen Colbert hosting an hour-long episode of a Michigan public access show might be my new favorite. Jack White serves as the “volunteer musical director,” playing the perfect straight man to Colbert’s silly schtick and the episode is full of other great cameos that I won’t spoil here.

Jack White and Stephen Colbert holding a hot dog and about to each take a bite of it

The whole episode is charming, chaotic, and incredibly fun to watch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJTXB5uT_C4

I’m excited to see whatever Stephen does next, especially if it involves a tour of public access TV shows across the country.

And since I couldn’t find a more graceful place to put this: fuck Brendan Carr and Trump for pushing Colbert off the air because their fragile egos couldn’t take a joke. The right loves to pretend they are defenders of free speech… up until someone criticizes them. Then they use the full power of the state to censor their opponents, while bragging about it.

The post Stephen Colbert’s Best Post-Cancellation Stunt Yet appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 25, 2026 04:20 AM

Certainly Strange

Popcorn

We recently switched to a different (larger) popcorn kernel, and I didn’t account for this when measuring it out by eye. These popcorns popped up much larger than the old ones, and the volume was so great that they lifted the lid off the pot. They could not be contained!

by Steen at May 25, 2026 04:14 AM

May 24, 2026

I Like Turtles

Camping and cottages

/2026/05/24/camping-and-cottages.html

May 24, 2026 07:00 AM

May 18, 2026

Doctor Popular

Reading eBooks with RSVP Nano

After seeing a few cool Instagram videos about it, I decided to try out Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (aka RSVP) to see how well it worked for me. Mostly I was excited to try out John Decebal’s RSVP Nano app for ESP32-S3 microcontrollers. These devices are around $30 each and John’s app is totally free.

Exploring the world of Rapid Serial Visual Presentation via the RSVP Nano app on an ESP32 microcontroller.
Currently testing it out with @charliejane's "All The Birds In The Sky".

— Doctor M. Popular (@docpop) 2026-05-17T01:36:07.443Z

RSVP is a method of presenting eBooks that doesn’t require the reader to move their eyes much. Text is displayed one word at a time, and you can control how fast it appears. Some people use this method to improve their reading speed, but I just thought it sounded fun to try.

It’s like a teleprompter for ebooks!

There are several free RSVP apps for mobile and the web that you can use to try this method out. I don’t have any specific recommendations yet, but you could copy the text from this post and try reading it in something like ReadRSVP to get a feel for the technique.

If you want to give RSVP Nano a try on your ESP32-S3 device, here’s what you’ll need:

Supported file types: EPUB, TXT, Markdown, HTML
Hardware: ESP32-S3 device + SD card (32GB or smaller)
Software: Chrome or Edge (for the web flasher)

Installing RSVP Nano was surprisingly easy thanks to John’s web flasher (Chrome or Edge required). I hooked my microcontroller up to Wi-Fi for over-the-air updates, and this thing is already packed with features.

I’m currently testing it out with Charlie Jane Anders’s All the Birds in the Sky. If you try it out, let me know your thoughts below.

If you’re interested in buying one of these ESP32-32 microcontrollers, consider using John’s affiliate link to help support his work-> https://www.waveshare.com/esp32-s3-touch-lcd-3.49.htm?&aff_id=153227

I’d also recommend giving John a follow on Instagram to see what cool new features he’s working on now.

The post Reading eBooks with RSVP Nano appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 18, 2026 02:36 AM

May 17, 2026

Certainly Strange

Board Game Night

We have reached a level of stability in the process where we can do things like have board game night again! I also walked to the library and found a cool book about textiles. It is like I am becoming myself again.

by Steen at May 17, 2026 08:35 PM

May 15, 2026

I Like Turtles

New gear day

/2026/05/15/new-gear-day.html

May 15, 2026 07:00 AM

May 11, 2026

Certainly Strange

Many Treats

I took the week off to focus on unpacking and organizing, and so I diligently cooked every random thing I could think of in order to avoid unpacking and organizing. I made pelmeni, using Max Miller’s recipe I made Schmoo Torte And, since schmoo torte calls for twelve (12) egg whites, I had twelve egg … Continue reading "Many Treats"

by Steen at May 11, 2026 05:21 AM

Doctor Popular

“How To Die (and Other Stories)” by Mike Monteiro

Mike Monteiro and I met up at Dynamo a few weeks ago to catch up and eat some Fernet-flavored donuts. We had a great chat and he even gave me a copy of his newest book, How to Die (And Other Stories). I’ve been carrying it around with me ever since.

A man holding a donut in front of his face, intentionally blocking his identity. This is Mike Monteiro, being sily with a donut. Mike has a long grey beard, which you can see from behind the donut. The photo is taken in the beautiful back patio of Dynamo Donuts on a sunny day.

This is partly because we are mid-move and all of my other books are in boxes, but it’s mostly because I enjoy Mike’s writing so much. I honestly don’t read as many books as I’d like to these days, but this one is such a fun read that I can’t put it down.

A completely empty bookshelf, except for one copy of

How To Die is a collection of beautiful, sarcastic, and funny essays about everyday life. Each chapter starts with a simple question like “How to wash the dishes” or “How to read a book”, but the answers always are far more thoughtful and interesting than you’d expect. It’s less like an advice book, and more like sharing stories over coffee (or donuts).

Mike has been answering reader-submitted questions like these in his weekly newsletter for years, and this book collects many of those, but I highly recommend it book form even if you’ve already subscribed to his weekly rambling.

You can grab How to Die (And Other Stories) as either a hardcover or an ebook.

I can’t recommend it enough.

Doc Pop holding a copy of

If you happen to be in San Francisco on May 11th, you should check out Mike’s event at Booksmith with special guest Annalee Newitz.

The post “How To Die (and Other Stories)” by Mike Monteiro appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 11, 2026 03:43 AM

May 09, 2026

Doctor Popular

One of the Coolest Music Videos I’ve Ever Seen: A Brutal Time Loop Done Right

Today I stumbled on this insane music video for “Bubble” by Yorushika, and I fell in love with it. Within the first five seconds, a man finds himself in a chair in a hotel room. As he tries to figure out where he is, a stranger in a dark trench coat bursts in and shoots him. He dies… only to find himself once again sitting in the same chair, in the same hotel room.

As a jazzy guitar riff plays, this time loop repeats over and over as the man desperately tries to escape his fate. Watch the video here:

It’s perfect, absolutely perfect.

The best part of “Bubble” is that it reminds me of a choose-your-own-adventure-style comic by Jason Shiga. In “Knock Knock,” you find yourself in a similar time loop. Waking up in a bedroom with a few seconds to evade being murdered by a stranger for some unknown reason. You can try to hide under the bed, escape through a window, or fight back. There are hundreds of ways to die in “Knock Knock,” and about half of them show up in “Bubble,” too.

A photo of a newspaper column titled

The post One of the Coolest Music Videos I’ve Ever Seen: A Brutal Time Loop Done Right appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at May 09, 2026 05:07 PM

May 07, 2026

I Like Turtles

Bache 2 Breakers

/2026/05/07/bache-2-breakers.html

May 07, 2026 07:00 AM

May 04, 2026

Certainly Strange

Moved in, weekend off

We took the weekend off from moving stuff to just relax. We turned in the keys to the old place on Thursday, and now all that remains is to organize and unpack. And there is no longer a time crunch on any moving stuff. So I think it is important to just relax for at … Continue reading "Moved in, weekend off"

by Steen at May 04, 2026 04:17 AM

April 27, 2026

Doctor Popular

The Art of Bus Stop Benches in San Francisco

The San Francisco Bay Area Bench Collective is an activist group that installs benches at public bus stops. A pretty awesome task, if you think about it. The benches are usually installed with a brown coat of paint, but some of them have been getting more decorative lately.

Like this jazzy bench at the corner of Mission and Valencia.

A wooden bench on the sidewallk at the corner of Mission and Valencia (where the 14 and 49 stop). The bench has been installed illegally, but looks very nice and is attached to the ground. It has recently been painted to look like the popular

Or this cosmic bench on Telegraph in Oakland.

A photo of a bench in Oakland. It shows the face of a blue woman with purple hair and things growing out of her head. Maybe cosmic flowers? A bike lane is visible behind the bench. A post from Little Hot Mess on Mastodon that says

Or my favorite new bench at the corner of 18th and Mission.

A heavy metal mural on the side of a smoke shop in SF. There is a bench installed on the sidewalk and the muralist has painted on that too, in a way that fits with the bigger mural behind it. It's a painting of a big yellow monster, and skulls, and blood. A closer look a the bench in front of the mural. This shows the sharp teeth of some hideous monster A further away look at the bench and mural on the side of a smoke shop. It shows monsters and skulls painted in a heavy metal style.

That last piece was created by Noah Peacock. He did the mural on the smoke shop there, and when the bench was added in front, Noah must have decided to work it into the final piece. It looks great.

As a note, I didn’t want to bother folks who were waiting for the bus, so I waited until the benches were empty before taking my photos. So imagine these same benches, but with your friends and neighbors using them.

The post The Art of Bus Stop Benches in San Francisco appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 27, 2026 04:32 PM

Certainly Strange

Housewarming Tiramisu

For months now, I have been obsessed with the idea of making a tiramisu once we were moved into the new place. I couldn’t tell you why. It just really captivated my mind. Well, this weekend, I finally made that happen. And it was everything I dreamed of.

by Steen at April 27, 2026 04:34 AM

April 23, 2026

I Like Turtles

Charleston

/2026/04/23/charleston.html

April 23, 2026 07:00 AM

April 20, 2026

Certainly Strange

Meal Milestones

We moved all our stuff over yesterday and it was exhausting and terrible but. We are here now! And last night was the first night we spent at the new place. I am so excited about our new home. The first thing I cooked on our new stovetop was popcorn. As we sat down at … Continue reading "Meal Milestones"

by Steen at April 20, 2026 06:11 AM

Doctor Popular

Fresh new Art In New Hood

We moved into our new place on 16th and Julian Ave, and I haven’t had time to install the curtains yet. So when the sun came out this morning at 6:30 AM, I was up with it. I decided to check out some new street art in the alleys and streets around us, starting with our own back alley, which seemed to have a ton of fresh paint.

Then I walked down Erie St, which was filled with awesome new pieces.

I headed back to 18th and Mission, a popular graffiti spot that is frequently covered with new pieces.

And I wrapped up my walk with a stroll through Clarion Alley.

The post Fresh new Art In New Hood appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 20, 2026 05:39 AM

April 19, 2026

I Like Turtles

Green whale

/2026/04/19/green-whale.html

April 19, 2026 07:00 AM

April 13, 2026

Certainly Strange

Life

April 18 is the Big Move Day, and life is hectic due to this. But also, we are getting excited for being in the new neighborhood And the SF Public Library has been doing a ton of really cool events at its main branch lately. Like last night, when it had the mobile gamelan there!

by Steen at April 13, 2026 03:03 AM

Doctor Popular

Joshua Ellingson demoing Pepper’s Ghost Illusions at Artist’s Television Access in SF

The Artist’s Television Access is an art space on Valencia and 21st st in San Francisco. On Saturday evenings, they’ve been doing a series of short films, live electronic music, talks, and more. This week’s set featured some rare footage of Clara Rockmore performing theremin in Bob Moog’s house, vintage ads for IBM, and Joshua Ellingson demonstrating the Pepper’s Ghost illusion along with his modular synthesizer.

Joshua standing behind his modular synthesizer and twisting buttons. This was shot at The Artist's Television Access in San Francisco before Josh's talk.

From the ATA’s description of the night:

Fine-tuning through the ultra-rich ether, we have discovered some, uh, “special” frequencies that ‘charm’, and re-animate concepts of contemporary A/V installation/performance, with jolts of juice both natural and ‘super’. Mission whiz Josh Ellingson marvels all with demos of his current works – thee eye-popping Pepper’s Ghost, as well as his re-wiring of cult director Sid DavisAge 13. Anchoring the second half is a co-hit that threatens to crack through the ‘Quantum Consensus’: the US premiere of Riar Rizaldi‘s Tellurian Drama, a 20-min anomaly that asks way more that it answers, on the uses and possible abuses of an obscure Malabar Radio Antenna, on the island of Java in the Indonesian archipelago during the Dutch colonial period. Berlin skeptic Thorsten Fleisch contributes Astrogolem, his digital hypothesis on a time-traveling Nikolai Tesla, while Craig Baldwin shares his own revelations from his speculative history Spectres of the Spectrum (exc). PLUS Piercing the Unknown, Hippies High on Alpha, Clara Rockmore’s Theremin, and other inquiries into novel pop-music forms flowing from those magickal waves of electricity! $13

The post Joshua Ellingson demoing Pepper’s Ghost Illusions at Artist’s Television Access in SF appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 13, 2026 02:48 AM

April 12, 2026

I Like Turtles

Banana ball

/2026/04/12/banana-ball.html

April 12, 2026 07:00 AM

April 06, 2026

Certainly Strange

Couch

We have a couch and fiber internet now. Big accomplishments.

by Steen at April 06, 2026 04:19 AM

Doctor Popular

We bought A Place In The Mission!

After living in San Francisco’s Mission District for 20 years, I’m excited to say that my partner and I have bought our first place! It’s the second floor condo in a 120 year old building on 16th Street near Valencia.

We never thought we’d actually own a place in San Francisco, but the stars all lined up and now we’ll be living in a beautiful home in heart of our favorite neighborhood.

We bought our first place, a 2nd floor unit on 16th St near Valencia,and just put in our first bits of furniture. This is so exciting! Shout out to Community Thrift a few blocks away.

— Doctor M. Popular (@docpop) 2026-04-03T00:23:37.615Z

The post We bought A Place In The Mission! appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at April 06, 2026 04:03 AM

April 02, 2026

I Like Turtles

Local art

/2026/04/02/local-art.html

April 02, 2026 07:00 AM

March 30, 2026

Certainly Strange

Donation Pile

Doc and I have been packing and sorting through our things into “keep” vs “donate” vs “throw away” piles. I look over at Doc’s “donate” pile, and I see Picard socks and a Chewbacca shirt. This just struck me as incredibly whimsical.

by Steen at March 30, 2026 04:18 AM

Doctor Popular

More Nerdy Events in San Francisco In April

I’m hosting two fun events in San Francisco this April. Both are free, in the Mission District, and open to everyone.

Then the SF Yo-Yo Club is happening on Saturday April 11th at 826 Valencia from 2-5pm. This is also a recurring event that happens on the second Saturday of each month at that same time and location.

The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco is our monthly comic jam. It’s an event for artists to come and collaborate on a jam comic together, so bring a pen and be ready to draw with strangers. We meet on the second Tuesday of each month at Finjan Qahwa Cafe from 7-9pm. That’s April 14th.

A yellow circular creature playing with a yo-yo. It sort of looks like Pac-Man but with arms and legs. It’s yo-yoing and almost hit a parrot that was flying above it. The flier says “SF Yo-Yo Club at 826 Valencia. All ages. On the second Saturday of month. Human-made art by DocPop.” Flier for The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco that shows a robot sitting at a table with a cup of coffee and some jam, while the robot draws on a sheet of paper. The robot is thinking

The post More Nerdy Events in San Francisco In April appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 30, 2026 04:00 AM

March 26, 2026

I Like Turtles

Back in the studio

/2026/03/26/back-in-the-studio.html

March 26, 2026 07:00 AM

March 23, 2026

Certainly Strange

Mutton and Medovik

Ever since I got Doc mutton for his birthday last time, he has wanted it again! And so, this year, more mutton! I also made him medovik for his cake Admittedly I made it because it is my favorite cake. But he liked it too, so it worked out!

by Steen at March 23, 2026 03:10 AM

March 20, 2026

Matt Spitz

Now with more AI

Of course, you can’t spell Matt Spitz without AI.

I did some Cloudfront, Route 53, and ACM gymnastics, and now the default domain name for this website is mttsptz.ai. All of the links from mattspitz.me that my millions of followers have bookmarked still work – they’ll just redirect here.

Welcome to the new revolution, where domain names cost $80/year for a dad joke. It’s worth every penny.

March 20, 2026 07:00 AM

March 17, 2026

Doctor Popular

Sketches from Tomales Bay

I’m back from a short vacation in West Marin where we kayaked across Tomales Bay and camped in a mellow site along the beach. Along the way we spotted tule elk, elephant seals, otters, deer, bioluminescent sea-creatures, and a juvenile gray whale.

I brought a fine-point Sharpie and a small sketchbook and kept a tiny travel journal to capture the trip.

A black and white drawing of Doc paddling in Tomales Bay, but being passed easily by several ducks. Doc seems unhappy about being slower than the happy ducks. A drawing of an elephant seal sleeping near a tiny creek. When the seal exhales, it blows bubbles in the water. Drawings of Doc Pop accidentally dropping his yo-yo in the bay from atop the end of a pier. A hand drawn ap showing Miller Boat Launch, Hog Island, and Tomales Bay. The text talks about kayaking around Hog Island and a smaller island named Piglet. It also mentions seeing seal pups. A moody drawing of a campfire. It is drawn with heavy use of crosshatching, to imply the lighting from the fire. In the foreground are the hands and feet of someone staying warm by the fire. They are holding a beer in one hand. A drawing of Doc putting beers in the bay to keep them cool. He puts them in a bag wth a rock in it, then wades out from the beach to get to colder water. He also leaves a giant stick that pokes out far enough that you can easily find the beers later. Text saying

and here’s a pdf version

The post Sketches from Tomales Bay appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 17, 2026 10:38 PM

March 16, 2026

Certainly Strange

Route Setting Workshop

This weekend I went to a route setting workshop at the gym, which was a lot of fun! We talked about how to think about setting routes and how to get people to do the beta you want on your climb. Then at the end we all collaboratively set a beginner-friendly traverse and talked about … Continue reading "Route Setting Workshop"

by Steen at March 16, 2026 03:30 AM

Doctor Popular

Rei’s Yo-Yo Balloon Experiment

I always love watching Rei Iwakura’s yo-yo videos. They’re full of creativity and constantly push the boundaries of what’s possible with a yo-yo. His newest video, an experiment combining helium balloons with yo-yoing, is no exception.

I was so inspired by this piece, that I even made some art about it.

A drawing of Rei Iwakaru doing yo-yo tricks with a yo-yo that is attached to a balloon

The post Rei’s Yo-Yo Balloon Experiment appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 16, 2026 03:18 AM

March 14, 2026

I Like Turtles

Spring training

/2026/03/14/spring-training.html

March 14, 2026 07:00 AM

March 09, 2026

Certainly Strange

Mini Vacation

Due to stress in life generally, and also due to not having taken a vacation in quite some time, we went to West Marin to go kayaking and camping around Tomales Bay. We arrived a couple days early, however, to just relax at a hotel on the bay so we didn’t have to jump right … Continue reading "Mini Vacation"

by Steen at March 09, 2026 05:17 AM

March 08, 2026

I Like Turtles

Liesl visit, lice visit

/2026/03/08/liesl-visit-lice-visit.html

March 08, 2026 08:00 AM

March 06, 2026

Doctor Popular

Posters From Tech Workers Criticize Google and OpenAI’s Work With the Military and ICE

New posters have appeared on Mission Street calling out Google and OpenAI over their business with the Department of War and ICE.

The group behind these posters, We Will Not Be Divided, claim to be current employees who are concerned their work will be used “for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight”.

Two more posters on Mission Street criticizing big tech for working with the Department of War. These are signed by “We Will Not Be Divided” and link to www.NotDivided.org 4 posters on Mission Street criticizing the leaders of OpenAI and Google for letting their tools be used for killing and surveillance.

Last week I wrote about a series of posters going up in these same spaces that criticized Elon Musk’s Grok AI for generating sexual images, revenge porn, and CSAM. I still don’t know who posted those, but I don’t think it’s the same group.

The post Posters From Tech Workers Criticize Google and OpenAI’s Work With the Military and ICE appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 06, 2026 02:06 AM

Nerdy Events in San Francisco Next Week

I’m hosting two fun events in San Francisco next week. Both are free, in the Mission District, and open to everyone.

The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco is our monthly comic jam. It’s an event for artists to come and collaborate on a jam comic together, so bring a pen and be ready to draw with strangers. We meet on the second Tuesday of each month at Finjan Qahwa Cafe from 7-9pm. That’s March 10th.

Then the SF Yo-Yo Club is happening on Saturday March 14th at 826 Valencia from 2-5pm. This is also a recurring event that happens on the second Saturday of each month at that same time and location.

A yellow circular creature playing with a yo-yo. It sort of looks like Pac-Man but with arms and legs. It’s yo-yoing and almost hit a parrot that was flying above it. The flier says “SF Yo-Yo Club at 826 Valencia. All ages. On the second Saturday of month. Human-made art by DocPop.” Flier for The Cartoonist Conspiracy of San Francisco that shows a robot sitting at a table with a cup of coffee and some jam, while the robot draws on a sheet of paper. The robot is thinking

The post Nerdy Events in San Francisco Next Week appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at March 06, 2026 01:42 AM

March 02, 2026

Certainly Strange

Nutty Dessert

Today I made a somewhat experimental (for me) dessert – I made cashew cream, and used that to make a very rich chia seed pudding (instead of using milk, etc). I also made a mousse with chocolate and coconut milk. I then layered these and added some crumbles (I had leftover from making medovik) and … Continue reading "Nutty Dessert"

by Steen at March 02, 2026 06:11 AM

February 25, 2026

I Like Turtles

LET'S GO SKIING!

/2026/02/25/lets-go-skiing.html

February 25, 2026 08:00 AM

February 24, 2026

Doctor Popular

RIP Inkbox Tattoos

Listen to an audio version, read by the author

Inkbox Tattoos shut down today. They offered high-quality temporary tattoos that looked great and lasted for weeks. I was a huge fan of their service, but I had a feeling the end was near when they started pushing “NFT tattoos.”

A mastodon post from Doc Pop:

Aside from the NFT tattoos, *sigh*, Inkbox had three main product options (Wayback link here):

  • Tattoo Pens – Pens filled with special ink that let you draw custom designs directly on your skin.
  • Signature Tattoos – A curated selection of ready-to-print designs submitted by artists from around the world.
  • Custom Tattoos – Users could choose a size and submit their own artwork to be turned into temporary tattoos.

The custom option was my favorite and I’ve ordered dozens of custom tattoos over the years:

A temporary tattoo showing Heatchliff the cat in a tank that is marked as A temporary tattoo of the RSS symbol. In the background there's also an enamel pin showing the RSS symbol and text that says A temporary tattoo featuring an ASCII art version of Frank Frazetta's A temporary tattoo on each arm. Each of them are a variation of the Chinese character for Biangbiang noodles.  Two temporary tattoos that are different representations of a lightbulb. One is very modern, the other is handdrawn and says

How it worked

Once you picked a size and submitted your black-and-white design, Inkbox would ship you a sticker to apply to your body. You’d leave it on for about 40 minutes, peel it off, and see light blue lines in its place. After 24 hours, those lines would darken nicely and stay on your skin for a few weeks.

An unused temporary tattoo from Inkbox. It says Inkbox sticker An Inkbox tattoo sticker that is currently stuck on an arm. applying to skin A temporary tattoo on an arm. it says the final tattoo (a day later)

Inkbox’s “special sauce” was jagua, a natural dye extracted from the fruit of a South American tree. Like henna, jagua absorbs into the outermost layer of skin, creating a dark blue stain that looks remarkably close to actual tattoo ink and doesn’t wipe off easily.

So long and thanks for all the Tatts

I’ve been on Inkbox’s mailing list for years and their closure came as a huge surprise to me. Up until February 21st, 2026, there was no mention of the site’s closure. Here’s the very first mention that came via email:

All Inkbox operations will be shutting down indefinitely on Monday, February 23rd, with the final day to purchase being Sunday, February 22nd, 2026.  All orders placed before the 23rd will be honored as usual. 

I tried ordering tattoos that same day, but the checkout screen was busted and no orders went through. 48 hours after announcing their closure, Inkbox’s site was fully shut down.

I recently learned that Inkbox was acquired by BIC in 2022. Best known for their plastic lighters and pens, BIC folded Inkbox into their “Skin Creative” division alongside Tattly and BodyMark. In December 2025, BIC quietly announced they were shutting down the entire Skin Creative division, including Inkbox. What’s surprising is that this was never communicated through their own newsletter, website, or social media until just two days before the site went dark.

That’s rough for anyone who got a gift card for Christmas. But hey, things happen. I’m going to miss my silly Inkbox tattoos. I wish I could have placed one more massive order before they closed.

The post RIP Inkbox Tattoos appeared first on Doc Pop's Weblog.

by doc at February 24, 2026 07:20 PM